GraniteStater
Veteran Member
Hi All -
First - the important part. My wife shocked me yesterday by saying "you know.... I think maybe we should get one of those boats you were showing me...."
I knew there was a reason I married her!
Its long been a dream of mine to spend time cruising around on a sailboat. Early in our marriage she was hesitantly supportive of the notion. As we've gotten older, more accustomed to creature comforts and had kids her interest in life aboard a sailboat has evaporated. I figured it would die as a unfulfilled daydream.
We recently ran into a family that was cruising around the Caribbean on a Krogen. I only spoke with the husband briefly but it got me researching trawlers. I loved the aesthetics of trawlers and more importantly the philosophy of life at 8kph.
I cautiously approached my wife with some strategically chosen pictures of boats for sale and was ecstatic when she said it was much more appealing than a sailboat. She loved the space and light inside a trawler and as the daughter of a lobsterman I think she really appreciated the design DNA.
The more she considered it the more supportive she became.
A little background - we have young kids (6 & 8) who we travel with a lot. We've got a lakehouse in New Hampshire and we aren't ready to give up our summers on the lake. We have decades of experience on boats but its largely limited to freshwater and boats under 30 ft. Not really applicable to ocean going vessels.
So what do we do next? In a perfect world we'd love to charter captain'd trawlers for a couple of weeks at a time. It would allow us all to learn, experience and decide if its really the right decision.
The issue is that outside of Moorings sort of operations I'm not finding many powerboats and even fewer trawlers.
Which brings me to - how hard is it to sell a boat like this? Does it make sense to buy a smaller boat somewhere in Florida and use it during our 4 to 6 weeks of vacation a year? I'm not thrilled about vacationing only in Florida for the next few years (we really like to travel) and it seems dumb to have a boat that unused 48 weeks a year.
Also, and this is just curiosity, do boat owners ever trade boats for a month at a time? It would be great to explore the San Juan islands or Europe but I can't imagine it would make sense to to bring a boat out there. It would be great to swap with someone who wanted to check out the Caribbean or east coast.
Thanks!!
First - the important part. My wife shocked me yesterday by saying "you know.... I think maybe we should get one of those boats you were showing me...."
I knew there was a reason I married her!
Its long been a dream of mine to spend time cruising around on a sailboat. Early in our marriage she was hesitantly supportive of the notion. As we've gotten older, more accustomed to creature comforts and had kids her interest in life aboard a sailboat has evaporated. I figured it would die as a unfulfilled daydream.
We recently ran into a family that was cruising around the Caribbean on a Krogen. I only spoke with the husband briefly but it got me researching trawlers. I loved the aesthetics of trawlers and more importantly the philosophy of life at 8kph.
I cautiously approached my wife with some strategically chosen pictures of boats for sale and was ecstatic when she said it was much more appealing than a sailboat. She loved the space and light inside a trawler and as the daughter of a lobsterman I think she really appreciated the design DNA.
The more she considered it the more supportive she became.
A little background - we have young kids (6 & 8) who we travel with a lot. We've got a lakehouse in New Hampshire and we aren't ready to give up our summers on the lake. We have decades of experience on boats but its largely limited to freshwater and boats under 30 ft. Not really applicable to ocean going vessels.
So what do we do next? In a perfect world we'd love to charter captain'd trawlers for a couple of weeks at a time. It would allow us all to learn, experience and decide if its really the right decision.
The issue is that outside of Moorings sort of operations I'm not finding many powerboats and even fewer trawlers.
Which brings me to - how hard is it to sell a boat like this? Does it make sense to buy a smaller boat somewhere in Florida and use it during our 4 to 6 weeks of vacation a year? I'm not thrilled about vacationing only in Florida for the next few years (we really like to travel) and it seems dumb to have a boat that unused 48 weeks a year.
Also, and this is just curiosity, do boat owners ever trade boats for a month at a time? It would be great to explore the San Juan islands or Europe but I can't imagine it would make sense to to bring a boat out there. It would be great to swap with someone who wanted to check out the Caribbean or east coast.
Thanks!!